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Policy needed on hemp as building product.

Don Barnard

Letters, Braintree and Witham Times, Essex

Wednesday 09 May 2001

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PLANT fibres can save much of the energy needed to make cars, caravans even lorries and result in parts that are 40 per cent lighter and are at least 65 cents cheaper per pound than fibreglass, can be recycled sily - and they are biodegradable.

A company called Indiana Bio-Composites will make a recyclable exterior panel for a mobile ho me from kenaf, a cordlike hibiscus, in the next two years.

Researchers at the University of Warwick [US] are working to convert a nine-loot-tall crop known as elephant grass into a tough material fit for biodegradable car bodies by 2006.

Car makers, have already begun to replace fibreglass with natural plant fibres. Last year in North America, following in the foot steps of their European counter parts such as Fords, BMW, replaced 2 percent of the fibreglass in mats, seat backs, parcel shelves , door panels, and other plastic composites with plant stalks. According to the New Jersey [US] consulting firm Kline & Company natural fibre's are expected to replace a fifth of the fibreglass in today's automobile interiors By 2010.

Biodegradable cars from natural fibres [growing a car from the soil] now, that would constitute the real engineering triumph?

One problem but a big one: The leading fibre in this field is cannabis hemp - Too bad it's a controlled substance: Even though the stalks have negligible effect the government views growing industrial hemp without a licence - cannabis, after all - as tantamount to growing the weed of wisdom.

Questions: How green is green? Why doesn't Geenpeace have a policy on hemp? Why is there no mention of hemp in the Green Party's manifesto?

Don Barnard,
Legalise Cannabis Alliance

 

 

 

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